Error1 has a new video up for the keyboard (or possibly Hitbox) warriors out there who have struggled with various special moves in the Street Fighter 4 series. He breaks down some of the "gotcha!" moments you can come across while performing these specials and what you can do to get your inputs recognized.

After my friends played BlazBlue insanely on the PC I don't think they found SF4 difficult anymore. I never had that issue that bad as I was originally more PC focused.I think I should buy a hitbox or make one with exactly how I want the buttons to be placed.

I don't need tips. :P I can do every move on my keyboard and even extended combos in BlazBlue and such... I'm actually VERY bad at playing fighting games on pads (tried in MvC2) and never tried an Arcade Stick.

Interesting stuff.. I couldnt imagine playing on a keyboard. I was pretty close to buying a hitbox but decided I didnt really wont to go through the whole learning process again. Im fine with a good old arcade stick.

@6 no only if you either really want a stick or certian techniques are impossible or close to impossible, if it works dont fix it and dont buy into the notion that you need a stick unlesss you personally want to

Having played and competed on a keyboard in A2, SFIV, MK, SFxT, etc... for the past 6 years I have to make a few corrections, sorry :(

Left, Down, Right, and Up should be assigned to S, D, F, and Spacebar respectively.

Also not all keyboards are mushy like Error1 says. Most performance keyboards focus on lighting fast response on the button down event, but don't give much consideration to the button up response. This is why the input sticks for a moment as the video describes. The HHKB Light 2 is cheap and is the fastest keyboard I've ever used. Just as fast as an arcade stick or hitbox. It's even faster than the HHKB Pro so don't waste the money like me x_x

Finally all keyboards ghost, even performance keyboards. The only difference regarding performance gaming keyboards is they make sure WASD does not ghost with any other button. this may or may not be optimal considering whatever your button layout may be.

If you're going to be playing with a keyboard, it's very important to understand how the keyboard works if you want to avoid dealing with problems like ghosting and delayed key releases (a by-product of ghosting).

Anyways the basics of it is you want diodes on your keys to avoid ghosted inputs. Most gaming keyboards will have these, but normally only for specific "gaming" keys, which would be WASD, spacebar and maybe your arrow keys and 1,2,3,4,5.

As much as possible you want to map your buttons to those keys to avoid sticky inputs. The problem is using WASD for arrows means your punches and kicks get mapped to diode-less keys.

Because of this, I've tended to prefer using the arrow keys (and maybe spacebar) for directional inputs, and then QWE/ASD for my buttons. It's counter-intuitive if you're used to a stick/joypad layout, but it maximizes the use of your gaming keys. In my case, I started gaming on PC way before I had my first console, so I've always been used to using the arrow keys with my right hand.

If having arrows on your right hand is too much of a hurdle, try finding a keyboard that has a gaming numpad. You can use WASD for directions and then the numpad for buttons.